  The Cummins diesel engine hummed along as it filled the air with its familiar smell. I hoped the engine’s front seal would hold out a while longer until I afford to have it fixed. It had been slightly leaking for a couple of weeks, which might continue for months or it could go out all at once.&nbsp; I paused to wonder how I ended up hauling logs on a used tractor trailer after putting myself through college and working as an accountant for over a decade. It was almost amusing that I was happier sweating in the summer and freezing in the winter, wrestling a big steering wheel as opposed to pecking computer keys in a climate controlled office, wearing nice clothes and cologne.
I took a deep breath, smelling the diesel fumes and said to myself, “yep, it’s great being my own boss. Well, except for the logging companies, my creditors, the Department of Transportation, and the damn truck itself.” But, looking into the future, I had no plans of laying myself off like my ex-company and my ex-boss had. Having worked my first few years in a major metropolitan area, I finally got the chance to move back home to north central Tennessee. The factory was owned by a major conglomerate and it was one of the biggest employers in town. When things went sour, the plant laid off half of its one thousand employees, including yours truly. It was decision time. Either move back to Memphis, Nashville, or Little Rock or try to find something closer to home. With my powers of deduction, I observed my surroundings and noticed the number of truck drivers around the area, both eighteen-wheelers and other delivery-type trucks. I saw milk trucks, ice trucks, part store trucks, tire store trucks and everything in between, all of which had to have drivers with Commercial Driver’s License (CDL’s). Part of my layoff package included a small education fund and I decided to use mine with a local company who trained truck drivers. Part of the training included getting my CDL’s and learning to drive everything from the eighteen-wheeler on down.
I certainly didn’t want to be an over-the-road driver and be away from home all the time, but I knew I could make decent money driving locally if I could just get a foot in the door. After “graduation,” I had trouble actually finding a job – everyone wanted someone with experience, or so it seemed. My uncle Jim has been an over-the-road truck driver for many years. The combination of pills and beer deteriorated his health and he was having difficulty loading and unloading the cars he was hauling. Car-hauling was one of the better paying truck driving gigs, according to Jim. Over the course of his career, Jim has seen the business explode in size and change the way the drivers operate. He said there were ten times the trucks on the road that there were a decade ago. Much of that may be a result of the increased regulations placed on the trucking industry by the Department of Transportation (DOT). In Jim’s heyday, truckers took pills so they could drive for days at a time, but the DOT now had strict requirements on the amount of hours a driver could drive per day. Part of the new regulations was keeping a strict logbook, detailing where they had been and how many hours they were on the road. According to Jim, many large trucking companies such as Roadway and Southeast Freight Lines only allowed their drivers to drive ten hours a day and they spent the rest of their time blowing money in truck stops.
Jim said they would only make $400 - $500 a week, while he made almost $1,000. The truck stop dwellers poured money in Poker machines, bought fat-laden meals and watched movies in the truck stop lounges. Meanwhile, Jim skirted the DOT regulations while getting paid more per mile than his freight-hauling brethren. Computers have negatively impacted the poor truck driver trying to make a living. While most truckers got paid by the mile, many padded their pay by not driving the shortest, most direct routes.
Part of this may have been because the load weighed too much and they had to dodge scales, and often the most direct route was difficult to maneuver a big rig into. So, many large trucking companies use a computer to generate the amount of miles they pay the truckers rather than the actual miles they drive. If a trucker is over loaded, he or she has to skirt the scales for free while running the risk of getting stopped by a cop with portable scales. Jim was feeling particularly poor, so he offered to let me come along and help for half the money.
We could cover more distance between us than he could by himself. At first, Jim had me driving at night on long lonely stretches of interstate where I was less likely to get myself into trouble. This was helping me because I had mouths to feed and it was giving me the experience I lacked. Jim was able to give me many pointers that they missed during the school, such as tips on low bridges, turning around when you get lost and actually finding the best route to bring a big rig to drop and pick-up. Even though a computer might tell you that going down a one-way street in downtown Atlanta is the closest route, it might be suicide if you got a truck into a traffic predicament that you couldn’t get out of. Looking at a big rig and thinking about backing its trailer into a tight location is intimidating, and I wondered if I’d ever be able to do it.
But, for the most part, it is a process to be learned like most other things. Of course, some drivers are better than others. There was a certain amount of pride among truckers for being able to put a tractor trailer in places where motorists seemed to have difficulty putting a compact car. I was surprised that being out on the open road without all the corporate politics had its own form of bent seductiveness. Running down the interstate at eighty miles an hour, sitting well above all the other vehicles, controlling many tons of rolling steel gave you a feeling of power like no other. I could see how people got both addicted to it and fed up with it. It was almost like having an extra-marital affair – getting to see parts of the country that you otherwise wouldn’t, but you felt guilty for missing baseball games and cheerleading practice.
Even though I was gone a lot, the $500 cash I got for Jim each week helped make ends meet at home. After a few trips, I was really getting the hang of the truck and loading and unloading the cars. Jim’s health took a turn for the worse and he asked me to make the next trip alone. I wasn’t able to get across country and back as quickly, but the $1,000 a week sure helped me get caught up on bills. I filled in for him for about six weeks before he was able to come back in the capacity that we started in. This went on for a couple more months before Jim was ready to go by himself. During that time, I met many of the people Jim knew.
I was surprised to find out that he ran into many of the same people along the way. The contacts helped me get some driving gigs and continue to make money. But, I sure missed my family and they me. During my real education, I found out that a truck was used by a company for three to four years then sold for nearly nothing. A new Freightliner, one of the middle-of-the-road trucks cost about a hundred grand and sold after four years for about ten thousand. Once they had that many miles, many companies wouldn’t allow them to be used because they started to break down more often. One of Jim’s old buddies drove his own log truck for timber companies around home. Like Jim, he had spent many years on the road and his health was not good.
He decided to retire and had his trailer up for sale. The truck was worn out and not really worth buying. Wanting to get off the road before I was totally hooked, I bought the trailer and an four-year-old Peterbuilt truck. He slid me in with his contacts and the next thing I know I’m worrying about paying for a front seal for my truck. But, I get to be home every night with my family. The work is hindered by weather and it has all the worries of owning your own business, but I’m making my payments and not putting up with the cutthroat atmosphere of Corporate America. I guess that’s how you go from accountant to truck driver. 
